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See also: Otto Colonna) (1417—1431) was elected at See also: Con-stance on St See also: Martin's
See also: Day, in a conclave composed of twenty-three cardinals and See also: thirty delegates from the five different " nations " of the council
.
Son of Agapito Colonna, who had himself become a See also: bishop and See also: cardinal, the new See also: pope belonged to one of the greatest See also: Roman families; to See also: Urban VI. had been due his entry, as ref erendarius, upon an ecclesiastical career
.
Having become a cardinal under Innocent VII., he had seceded from See also: Gregory XII. in 1408, and together with the other cardinals at See also: Pisa, had taken See also: part in the election of See also: Alexander V. and afterwards of
See also: John
See also: XXIII
.
At See also: Constance, his role had been chiefly that of an arbiter; he was a See also: good and gentle See also: man, leading a See also: simple See also: life, See also: free from intrigue
.
While refraining from making any pronouncement as to the validity of the decrees of the See also: fourth and fifth sessions, which had seemed to proclaim the superiority of the council over the pope, Martin V. nevertheless soon revealed his See also: personal feelings by having a constitution read in consistory which forbade any See also: appeal from the See also: judgment of the See also: sovereign pontiff in matters of faith (May 1o, 1418)
.
As to the reform, of which everybody felt the See also: necessity, the fathers in council had not succeeded in arriving at any agreement
.
Martin V. himself settled a See also: great number of points, and then passed a series of See also: special concordats with See also: Germany, See also: France, See also: Italy, See also: Spain and See also: England
.
Though this was not the thorough reform of which need was felt, the council itself gave the pope a satisfecit
.
When the council was dissolved Martin V. made it his task to regain Italy
.
After staying for long periods at See also: Mantua and Florence, where the deposed pope, Baldassare Cossa (John XXIII.), came and made submission to him, Martin V. was enabled to enter See also: Rome (See also: Sept
.
30, 1420) and measure the extent of the ruins See also: left there by the Great See also: Schism of the West
.
He set to See also: work to restore some of these ruins, to reconstitute and pacify the Papal See also: State, to put an end to the Schism, which showed signs of continuing in See also: Aragon and certain parts of See also: southern France; to enter into negotiations, unfortunately unfruitful, with the See also: Greek See also: Church also with a view to a return to unity, to organize the struggle against
See also: heresy in Bohemia; to interpose his pacific See also: mediation between France and England, as well as between the parties which were rending France; and, finally, to welcome and See also: act as See also: patron to saintly re-formers like Bernardino of See also: Siena and Francesca See also: Romana, foundress of the See also: nursing sisterhood of the Oblate di Tor de' Specchi (1425)
.
In accordance with the decree Frequens, and the promises which he had made, Martin V., after an See also: interval of five years, summoned a new council, which was almost immediately transferred from See also: Pavia to Siena, in consequence of an epidemic (1423)
.
But the small number of fathers who attended at the latter See also: town, and above all, the disquieting tendencies whicl began to make themselves felt there, induced the pope to force on a dissolution of the See also: synod
.
Pending the See also: reunion of the new council which had been summoned at See also: Basel for the end of a See also: period of seven years, Martin V. himself endeavoured to effect a See also: reformation in certain points, but he was carried off by apoplexy (Feb
.
20, 1431), just as he had designated the See also: young and brilliant Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini to preside in his place over the council of Basel
.
See L
.
Pastor, Geschichte der Papste (1901), i
.
205-279; J
.
See also: Guiraud, L'E°tat pontifical acres le See also: Grand Schisme (1896); Mintz, See also: Les Arts a la tour See also: des gapes pendant le xve et le xvie siecle (1878) ; N
.
Valois, La Crise religieuse du xve siecle; le pape et le concile (1909), vol. i. p. i.—xxix., 1-93
.
(N
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